I stood in a park near my house the other day and watched people.
It was a normal scene. The new leaves of spring made the trees look green. The light came through in soft patches. People moved in both directions — talking, laughing, walking with purpose. Nothing about it would have caught anyone’s attention.
I was standing right in the middle of it.
I wasn’t pushed aside. Wasn’t ignored. Certainly wasn’t rejected.
But I didn’t feel part of the scene. I didn’t feel like those people. I somehow wasn’t one of them.
I could hear pieces of conversations as people walked past. I could tell who was relaxed and who was distracted and who was in a hurry. There was nothing unfamiliar about what I was seeing.
It felt like a scene that I was close enough to recognize, but not close enough to step into. I didn’t know how to belong there.
When I was younger, I would have reacted to that feeling differently. I would have felt some combination of frustration and anger. I would have assumed something needed to be fixed — either in me or in the world around me.
I would have tried to close the gap. I don’t feel that way anymore.

I feel despair about evil tonight, but my cats offer some comfort
How long will I keep finding toxic programming from my childhood?
Law profs: the Constitution means whatever we say it means
If we keep waiting for perfection, we’ll always keep traveling alone
AUDIO: If we’ve experienced hurt, why do we keep trusting in love?
Until we experience awakening, we’re blind to truth in our hearts
Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
Instinctive desire to ‘do something’ almost always leads to bad policy